Category: Recipe

  • 500 Years Over a Hot Mexican Stove

    Tzintzuntzan Frijolitos al Fogón
    Make-do old fashioned cooking technique in Tzintzuntzan, Michoacán.  Frijoles boil in a clay pot on the fogón (an on-the-ground cooking fire).  The fire ring, in this case, is the wheel rim of a truck; the wood is what was available at the time of need.  The clay pot ensures old-fashioned flavor and Mexico Cooks!' interest in the cooking process ensured old-fashioned hospitality.  "Come back at 1:30," the cook told us.  "The beans will be ready and I'll make you some tortillas."

    I often talk about Mexico as a country full of contradictions and paradoxes. As a case in point, the Mexican kitchen of the 21st century lives cheek by jowl with the Mexican kitchen that predates the 16th century arrival of the Spanish, and we're all the richer for it. Ancient utensils and techniques are put to daily use in modern kitchens so beautiful they could be in any of today's slick kitchen design magazines. In today's Mexican kitchen, a molcajete and its tejolote (volcanic stone mortar and pestle) often sit on the counter next to a Kitchen-Aid mixer, and a wood-kiln fired olla de barro (clay bean pot) may well share cupboard space with a Le Creuset Dutch oven.

    Outdoor Kitchen
    Outdoor kitchen in San José de la Torre, Michoacán.  In a few very rural parts of Mexico, it is still possible to find these old-style kitchens, built apart from the main house to keep the rest of the house cool.  Just inside the kitchen, to the left in the photograph, you can see steam rising from a boiling pot.

    It was in the convents that many of the most wonderful Mexican foods were invented to take advantage of local products, mixing and matching them in old European recipes. Today, those recipes that consist of the mix of Europe and the New World are among the most traditional of the Mexican kitchen.

    The cooking utensils that were in daily use in Europe were almost nonexistent in the New World. Because metal utensils like those used in Spain were prohibitively expensive in the New World, they were replaced by utensils made of indigenous clay. Clay pots were gradually perfected, in large part due to the incorporation of new glazing techniques and new designs. Other utensils were made from native volcanic stone mined predominantly in Mexico's central highlands.  Prehispanic utensils such as the molcajete, the comal (clay griddle), and the metate (flat rectangular grinding stone) were common. Most home cooks in the days of the Spanish colonial period were indigenous women servants who brought their utensils with them into Spanish New World kitchens.

    Encuentro Maíz Azul con Metate
    Metate y metlapil (volcanic grinding stone with its volcanic stone mano), similar to a rolling pin. The cook has been grinding masa de maíz azul (blue corn dough).  She will use some of the water in the small pot to dampen the dough as needed.  The white cloth both shades the dough and protects it from insects.

    The volcanic stone metate, along with its metlapil de metate (similar to a rolling pin made of stone) was the principal cooking utensil in the prehispanic kitchen, and it's still used today in rural areas to grind nixtamal-ized corn for making tortilla masa (dough). Volcanic stone is porous and microscopic pieces of it break off into the corn as it is ground, becoming an essential part of the dough. It's so essential to the texture and flavor of the masa that even in enormous commercial processing plants, the corn-grinding stones are made of volcanic rock.

    The metate is also used to grind dried chiles and other grains used to prepare moles and other complex dishes, and to prepare highly prized chocolate de metate used for cooking and preparing hot chocolate.

    The second most important piece in the indigenous kitchen is the three-legged molcajete, a kind of volcanic stone grinding mortar. It's still widely used, especially for grinding soft ingredients such as tomatoes, green chiles, green onions, herbs, and other condiments. A well seasoned salsa de molcajete (sauce to be used at table, made in a molcajete) is the mark of a wonderful cook.

    Encuentro Salsa Ingredientes
    Ingredients for salsa, ready to prepare in a volcanic stone molcajete.  At the bottom and top of the photograph are comal (griddle)-roasted Roma tomatoes.  You can also see roasted tomates verdes (tomatillos) and dried, toasted chiles.

    Family-operated workshops in certain Mexican villages carve locally mined volcanic stone into the familiar shape of the molcajete and the less frequently seen metate.  It can be difficult to find molcajetes and metates at the source, unless you know where to look.  The first time I ventured to one of these small villages, I expected to see molcajetes and metates for sale in stores. I discovered that I had to knock on the doors at private homes in the towns and ask if anyone there made molcajetes.

    Fortunately there is an easier way for most of us to find a traditional molcajete or metate. Next time you're on a shopping expedition to one of Mexico's regional mercados, ask the merchants where to find a vendor who sells them.  They usually range in price from $65 pesos for a tiny molcajete just big enough to use for serving salsa at the table to the mother of all molcajetes priced at $125 pesos. The vendors may also sell even bigger ones carved with the head of a pig. Those are priced at approximately $600 pesos.

    Cocina Mexicana Clásica
    Classic Mexican kitchen from the 1920s.  Casa Zuno, Guadalajara.

    The basis and essence of the earliest and most current cuisines of Mexico is what is called the corn kitchen. Corn and corn masa have been used to prepare an infinite variety of staple foods in this country since before written history. The word masa comes from a Nauhatl word that means 'our flesh'. It's said that the Nauhatls believed that their gods created man and woman from corn dough. That equation of corn with the flesh of the human being is more telling than any long description of prehispanic, colonial, or present-day eating habits could be. Corn was all, and in many Mexican homes today, corn is still all.

    Encuentro Manos en la Masa
    For milennia, corn tortillas have traditionally been made by hand.  Small balls of corn masa (dough) are rhythmically patted into near-perfect rounds, then toasted on a comal (griddle) over wood fire.  The technique is passed from mother to daughter and mother to daughter in families everywhere in Mexico; girls start pat-pat-patting masa into tortillas almost from the time they start to walk.

    Tortillas de Maíz Azul
    Blue corn gorditas (thick tortillas) toasting over wood fire on a clay comal.  These gorditas are also hand-patted, but are left relatively thick so that after toasting, they can be split and stuffed with your choice of delicious fillings and salsas.

    The corn tortilla has always been the single most important staple food of Mexico. Tortillas with a serving of beans are a perfect protein. In many impoverished Mexican homes, corn tortillas and a pot of beans are even today the only daily fare. At all levels of society, a meal eaten at home is not complete without a large stack of tortillas, carefully wrapped in a special napkin. A family of five can easily eat a kilo of tortillas as many as eighteen tortillas per person or more along with the comida (main meal of the day). 

    From the time tortillas originated, women have patted balls of damp masa by hand to form it into perfect circles. It's still a mark of pride for a restaurant to offer tortillas "hechas a mano" (hand made). In some homes, especially in very rural areas, the rhythmic pat-pat-patting of hands making tortillas marks the dinner hour.

    In many cases 'hand made' now means tortillas prepared using a tortilla press made of either wood or metal. Masa can either be purchased ready-made at a nearby tortillerí­a or cooks can prepare it from dried corn. Either way, once the masa is ready the tortillas must be made quickly or the masa will be too dry to work. A piece of waxed paper or one half of a plastic storage bag is placed on the bottom half of the tortilla press. A ball of dough the size of a golf ball or slightly larger is pulled from the bulk of masa; then the dough is flattened slightly by hand and placed on the plastic. A second plastic or waxed paper sheet is placed on top of the dough and the press is squeezed shut.

    Tortilla Press My Home Cooking.Net
    Metal tortilla press in use.  Note the sheets of plastic; one sheet is on the base of the press and the second is placed on the ball of dough.  Photo courtesy My Home Cooking.

    Open the press and there's a perfectly round tortilla, ready to have the plastic peeled off. Now do it again. And again. And again, and remember, there are five of you in the family and at least some of you will eat eighteen tortillas each at this meal! Even using the modern convenience of a tortilla press, it's still backbreaking work to prepare enough tortillas for a family's mealtime needs.

    Of course Mexico is not only about rural tradition and the indigenous corn kitchen. I recently talked about recent trends in the Mexican kitchen with Licenciada Virginia Jurado Thierry, owner of  Arquitectura en Cocinas in Guadalajara. Walking into her design center in fashionable Colonia Providencia is like walking into a high end kitchen designer's showroom anywhere in the world.

    Sleekly modern wood cabinets are shown with stainless steel refrigerators and restaurant quality stoves; glass-front cupboards reflect top-of-the-line small appliances crouching on quartz polymer resin counters. When I explained the nature of this article, Lic. Jurado nodded and invited me into her private office to chat.

    Cocina Después de Remodelar 1
    Mexico Cooks!' home kitchen in Morelia, Michoacán.  The pottery, tile countertops and copper sink–and the wooden trastero (dish cupboard)–are traditional styles.  The over-and-under-the-counter cupboards and the stove, washer, and dryer are new-fangled modern conveniences.

    "So many people think the design of the Mexican kitchen is only done with talavera tiles. New kitchens are constantly evolving, and new design here is similar to new design everywhere. As you noticed as you walked through our showrooms, we offer nothing but the finest in kitchens. Everything is designed with convenience and efficiency and performance in mind." She paused to reach behind her and take down a thick notebook. "These are some of the products we offer to our clients."

    We flipped through the book. Familiar names in high-quality, high-price tag kitchen design jumped out at me: European lines like Miele and Smeg, United States manufacturers such as SubZero, Wolf, Viking, and Dacor, and the noteworthy Italian Valcucina line were just a few important manufacturers' names I noticed.  "We can offer the client a stove for $5000 pesos or we can offer the client a stove for $15,000 U.S. Usually we find a meeting place somewhere in between those figures," Lic. Jurado told me.

    Modern Kitchen
    Twenty-first century Mexicans have gone crazy for the minimalist look, even in their kitchens.  Sleek, modern design is most common in new construction.  Photo courtesy Dotavideo.

     Lic. Jurado smiled. "Our clients really want a bright, clean look. That translates into light woods such as oak for cabinets, lots of whites and tones of gray, stainless steel and glass. People also want aluminum accessories and opaque glass, especially for cupboard doors. Paint colors are light. For counter tops, we're getting many requests for melamine in new, stain-free colors, and polymer resin quartz in light colors. And some people want granite, or colored concrete. It's a whole range of effects, but with a very clean European look."

    We've traveled more than 500 years, from pre-colonial days to the 21st century, in the course of a brief article. The contradictions of Mexico, even in as small a detail as the utensils and design of a kitchen, still amaze me.

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours.

  • Mercado de San Juan, Distrito Federal: You Can Get Anything You Want…

    Mercado SJ Book Cover
    The definitive book about Mexico City's marvelous Mercado de San Juan, available in Spanish at the market.  Mexico Cooks! has never seen it for sale anywhere else.  It was published in mid-2010.

    Everybody in Mexico City who loves to eat, including Mexico Cooks!, loves the small but mighty Mercado de San Juan.   Both wholesaler to restaurants and tourist attraction, this market offers its public almost anything you can think of to eat.  Food that is available almost nowhere else in Mexico is available at this unassuming venue: bitter melon sits cheek by jowl with wild boar, deep green baby zucchini the size of golf scoring pencils rub shoulders with living escargots, fresh-killed deer hangs silent next to a row of ready-to-cook osso bucco.  Want a quarter kilo of beautiful jamón serrano or a handful of chile serrano?  Both are yours, just step up to the counter at their respective stalls.

    Mercado SJ Cabeza Cabrito con Gusanos Maguey
    Unusual stall-mates: a goat head, skinned but complete with long luxurious eyelashes, and live red maguey worms.

    Mercado SJ Alcochofa Baby
    A huge bouquet of gorgeous baby artichokes, leaves tightly closed and tinged with purple.  Each of these was smaller than a baseball, unlike the usual giant-size variety I've seen for sale elsewhere.

    Mercado SJ Salumi and Cheese
    Imported cheeses and imported dried sausages.  Buy an entire length or just a few slices of salami, buy a wheel or 100 grams of cheese–you may never see any of these at any other market.

    Mercado SJ Baguette
    Real honest-to-god crunchy-on-the-outside, densely-chewy-on-the-inside baguette to accompany your sausage and cheese!  The Travel and Leisure magazine displayed on the lower shelf features the Mercado de San Juan among the 40 travel memories mentioned on the cover.

    Mercado SJ Baby Bok Choy
    Among other items (including yet another shopping bag to cart home all our purchases), Mexico Cooks! bought ten lovely baby bok choy, a quarter kilo (half pound) of large, crisp snow peas, and a big hunk of fresh ginger for 33 pesos (about $2.50 USD).

    Mercado SJ Lechón
    Lechón (suckling pig), ready to roast. 

    Mercado SJ Calabacititas Verde y Amarillo
    Tiny zucchini, each approximately 3" long, and wee yellow squash, each about 2" in diameter.  These miniature vegetables are among the few that come pre-wrapped.

    Mercado SJ Assorted Cans and Jars
    Bottles and jars of Asian spices, sauces, and other condiments, including sesame oil, coconut cream, oyster sauce, snow mushrooms, hoisin sauce, and more.  The only thing I didn't see that I sometimes need is thick soy–not black soy, but thick soy, like slightly salty molasses.

    Mercado SJ Osso Bucco Better
    Fresh and glorious osso bucco, lined up for your viewing and purchasing pleasure.

    Mercado SJ Ostras Almejas y Almejas Blancas
    Back to front: fresh oysters, big brown clams, and small white clams.

    Mercado SJ Ginger and Eggplants
    Lovely shiny purple Asian eggplants, beautiful ginger root, and assorted greens.

    Mercado SJ Calamar Tentáculos
    Detail of fresh octopus.  Click to enlarge any photo for a closer look.

    Mercado SJ Conejo
    Rabbit is extremely popular–and generally quite delicious–as served in Mexico.  These, fresh-killed, include the heads.  Many are sold with the furry feet still attached.  A butcher told me, "Some people think we sell cat meat.  The heads or feet are left on to prove that the animals are rabbits."

    Mercado SJ Col Napa
    Savoy cabbage and a variety of lettuces.

    Mercado SJ Machitos
    Preparing machitos for sale.  The lacy membrane spread out on the butcher block is caul fat.  The butcher is wrapping the fat around a small bundle of tripas (intestines).  The packets are steamed, then browned and served in tacos with a spicy red salsa.

    Mercado SJ Teléfonos de México
    Your landmark.  The Mercado de San Juan is just west of the Teléfonos de México (Telmex) central offices and tall tower of antennas.

    Truly, there isn't another market in all of Mexico that is as beloved by chefs, gourmets, and gastronomes as the Mercado de San Juan.  If you fall into any of those categories, let Mexico Cooks! know and I will happily tour you through the market stalls.

    Mercado de San Juan
    Calle Ernesto Pugibet, between José María Marroquí and Luis Moya
    Metro San Juan de Letrán or Metro Salto de Agua

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours.

  • Sweet Home Mexico: Restaurante Dulce Patria and Chef Martha Ortiz

    Dulce Patria Martha Ortiz
    Chef Martha Ortiz, chef, owner, delightful human being, and creative guiding light extraordinaire behind Restaurante Dulce Patria–the name means 'sweet homeland'.  Photo courtesy Martha Ortiz.

    Several months ago, a close friend, a chef from Morelia, invited me to dine at Restaurante Dulce Patria.  She wanted to introduce me to her friend, the restaurant's chef/owner Martha Ortiz.  The restaurant, in the upscale heart of Mexico City's Colonia Polanco, had been open for a bit over a year and frankly, I had avoided going.  I had heard so much hype about the space itself, about the chef, and about the wonders of the food and presentations–how true could it all be?  Those of you who are faithful Mexico Cooks! readers know that I have occasionally been guilty of what I call contempt prior to investigation; my long avoidance of Dulce Patria wasn't quite that, but it was related to that thought: I just didn't want to be disappointed after hearing and reading so much deferential bowing and scraping about the restaurant's excellence.

    Dulce Patria Comensales
    Diners seated in a front window of the upstairs dining room at Dulce Patria.  Photos by Mexico Cooks! unless otherwise noted.

    Dulce Patria Table Detail
    Your beautifully appointed table awaits you, either on the ground floor or at the top of the spiral staircase at Dulce Patria.  Photo courtesy Dulce Patria.

    That first visit to Dulce Patria left me wanting more: more of the ambiance, which is stellar; a better chance to read the menu, which is celestial; and more opportunities to taste various heavenly and completely Mexican platillos (dishes) as prepared and presented by the Dulce Patria kitchen. 

    Dulce Patria Sangritas
    My beloved wife would rather have a tequila than a mixed drink before comida (Mexico's midday main meal).  Her tequila reposado is on the far right of the photo; the chasers are, right to left, (red) house-made traditional sangrita with finely diced pineapple and a jícama swizzle; (pale green) tomate verde (tomatillo) with minced jícama; and (wine-color) beet with finely diced cucumber.  She liked the traditional sangrita best; she let me taste them all and I preferred the beet.

    Dulce Patria Raspado
    Mexico Cooks! was seduced by a powerful craving for this raspado sentimental de grosela y limón con mezcal (a frozen concoction of red current, lemon, and mezcal).  The drink was delicious, although sweet enough for dessert instead of a pre-comida cocktail.  The large red menu is Dulce Patria's standard, while the small black menu contains the special offerings of the month.  Both menus are written in Spanish and English.

    Dulce Patria Pan de Violetas
    One of the several fresh, hot-out-of-the-oven house-made breads we tried.  This center of this delicious bread is both colored and lightly flavored with violets. 

    In 2002, Chef Martha Ortiz opened Restaurante Áquila y Sol in Mexico City.  Águila y Sol (the name means "Eagle and Sun" and refers to the two faces of a Mexican coin) became the favorite destination for diners crazy for alta cocina mexicana (Mexican haute cuisine).  The restaurant was one of the first of that genre, was wildly praised, and was always packed with food-savvy foreign tourists and power-lunching Mexicans.  For reasons beyond Chef Martha's control, the restaurant closed after several enormously successful years.  Mexico City's high-flying foodistas were bereft and were left to console themselves with what they considered to be  dimmer stars in the food firmaments.

    Dulce Patria Ensalada de Arugula con Cabuches
    Salad of crisp baby arugula with cabuches (cactus flower buds) and a shard of crunchy, seedy violet brittle.  The salad's vinaigrette is made with peanuts and a whisper of chile morita.  The small morita is a cousin of the chile chipotle and gives just a hint of that chile's same smoky flavor to the salad dressing.

    A goodly part of the enormous success of Dulce Patria rests in the essence of the feminine, in the tremendous sensuality of not only the restaurant's ambiance but also the highly stylized presentations of what's in your glass and on your plate.  Those, plus the intense attention to every detail of every diner's individual Dulce Patria experience, create the unique sensation of having left the world behind and entered into a magic realm of a heightened reality designed just for you by the chef.  Did we like it?  No.  We loved it, and so will you.

    Dulce Patria Tacos de Chilorio
    Tacos de chilorio, served over shredded lettuce with papaloquelite, a traditional herbal accompaniment for Mexico City-style tacos.  Chilorio is shredded, seasoned pork, in this instance used to fill tacos.

     Dulce Patria Salsas
    The four assorted salsas for the tacos de chilorio.  The salsas ranged from the mild green (far right) to the hotter-than-the-hinges-of-hell dusky black (far left).  Each salsa was delicious; my particular favorite was that hellishly hot one.

    Dulce Patria Enchiladas con Manchamanteles
    This entrée plate is composed of (left to right in the photo) refried black beans in a little deep-fried totopo (tortilla chip) bowl, a puddle of mole manchamanteles, four enchiladas de manchamanteles topped with a swirl of crema de mesa (table cream), pickled red onion, flowers of queso fresco (fresh cheese) and a small bowl of green salad.  The added garnish–on the thin stick–is a little green squash star, a carrot flower, and a cube of beet.  Not only is the presentation exquisite, but look at the detail (just click the photo to enlarge it): a heaping spoonful of beans on the rectangular plate keeps the totopo bowl from tipping or sliding, and under the salad bowl is a tiny round of banana leaf for traction to keep the bowl in place.

    Dulce Patria Pescado Zarandeado
    What can I say?  This deep-red plate holds a tamal de frijol (bean tamal, foreground), a dish of marvelous salsa, two impeccable wedges of limón con chile (Mexican lime dusted with powdered chile), and a huge flower that hides a perfectly prepared portion of pescado zarandeado (marinated, grilled fish).  Look again at that flower: it's a chile ancho, split into four petals and fried.  I threatened to wear it behind my ear.

    Dulce Patria Dulces con Voladores
    A whimsical post-dessert offering of house-made typical Mexican sweets: sweetened tamarind pulp with chile, glorias (burned milk candy with nuts), and more.  Some tables received their candies in small toy trucks, some were arrayed on miniature painted wood trasteros (dish shelves).  Ours were presented on a tray at the base of a spinning wooden airplane toy. 

    Among her many accomplishments, Chef Martha Ortiz has co-authored eight award-winning books and has participated in numerous international culinary events as well as similar events here in Mexico.  She has dedicated her professional life to bringing Mexican cuisine to the forefront of the finest culinary traditions in the world.  As a passionate and creative chef, she maintains the highest respect for Mexico's historic traditions. Her goal is to transmit "amor a lo propio"–love for what is our own–through a complete sensorial experience of the flavours, colours, textures and aromas of Mexican gastronomy.

    Mexico Cooks! has eaten literally thousands of meals in Mexico's far-flung restaurants, ranging from Tijuana in the far north to Chiapas, the southern border state, and everywhere from the humblest choza (hut) to the most elegant of dining rooms.  I was never privileged to enjoy the delights of Águila y Sol, but I cannot imagine that the experience would have surpassed that of our meal at Dulce Patria.  If you live in Mexico City, if you travel here from within the country or from a foreign land, put a meal at Dulce Patria at the top of your list of must-experience culinary pleasures.  From the time you walk through the front door until the time you leave with a little box of gift sweets in your hand, you will be in enchanted territory that will make you want to leave a trail of violet-scented breadcrumbs to facilitate your return. 

    Restaurante Dulce Patria
    Calle Anatole France #100 (near the corner of Pres. Masaryk)
    Colonia Polanco/Anzures
    Mexico City
    Tel. 3300-3999 (Cellular)
    Reservations strongly recommended
    Hours: Sunday 1:30PM to 5:30PM
               Monday through Saturday 1:30PM to 11:30PM
    Average cost per person: $600 pesos and up plus beverages

    Looking for a tailored-to-your-interests specialized tour in Mexico? Click here: Tours. 

  • Carne de Cerdo en Salsa Verde (Pork in Green Sauce): Mexico Cooks! Favorite Main Dish for Parties

    This article originally published a little over a year ago and has been extremely popular with Mexico Cooks! readers.  When I recently prepared carne de puerco en salsa verde for guests, it occurred to me to re-publish the recipe and the photos.  It's still a keeper and still Mexico Cooks!' simplest go-to company dish.

    Tomate y Chile
    Tomatillos with their husks and fresh chiles serrano.

    If you are like most cooks–Mexico Cooks! included–there are times when you want to astonish your guests with your intricate culinary skills by preparing the most complicated and time-consuming recipes you know.  A seven-course Szechuan dinner that I prepared a year or so ago comes immediately to mind; it took me several days to recover just from the preparations, much less the actual cooking. 

    Then there are other times when you want to prepare something relatively quick but still completely delicious and which will inevitably win raves from your companions at table.  This recipe for pork in green salsa completely satisfies both requirements.  It's my never-fail dish for many company dinners.

    Carne de Cerdo en Salsa Verde (Pork in Green Chile Sauce)
    Six generous servings

    Ingredients
    Salsa verde (Green sauce)
    1 pound tomatillos (known in Mexico as tomate verde), husks removed
    4 or 5 whole chiles serrano, depending on your tolerance for picante (spiciness)
    1/2 medium white onion, coarsely chopped
    1 clove garlic (optional)
    1 medium bunch fresh cilantro, largest stems removed
    Sea salt to taste

    Manojo de Cilantro
    Fresh cilantro.

    Carne de cerdo (Pork Meat)
    1 kilo (2.2 pounds) very lean fresh pork butt, cut into 2" cubes
    White flour
    Salt
    Oil or lard sufficient for frying the pork

    Preparation
    Salsa verde
    In a large pot of water over high heat, bring the tomatillos and chiles (and garlic, if you choose to use it) to a full rolling boil.  Boil just until the tomatillos begin to crack; watch them closely or they will disintegrate in the water.

    Hervido
    Let the tomatillos and chiles (and garlic, if you like) boil until the tomatillos begin to crack.

    Using a slotted spoon, scoop the cooked tomatillos, salt, and chiles into your blender jar.  There's no need to add liquid at first, but reserve the liquid in which the vegetables boiled until you see the thickness of your sauce.  You might want to thin it slightly and the cooking liquid will not dilute the flavor. Set the vegetables aside to cool for about half an hour.  Once they are cool, cover the blender, hold the blender cap on, and blend all the vegetables, including the chopped onion, until you have a smooth sauce. 

    Be careful to allow the tomatillos and chiles to cool before you blend them; blending them while they are fresh from the boiling water could easily cause you to burn yourself, the hot mixture tends to react like molten lava in the blender.  (Note: don't ask me how I know this.) 

    Listo para Licuar
    In the blender, the boiled and cooled tomatillos and chiles.  The cilantro goes in last.

    While the blender is running, remove the center of its cap and, little by little, push the cilantro into the whizzing sauce.  Blend just until smooth; you should still see big flecks of dark green cilantro in the lighter green sauce.  Test the salt and correct if necessary.  Reserve the sauce for later use.

    Carne Dorada
    Golden brown pork cubes.

    Carne de Cerdo (Pork Meat)
    Preheat oven to 170°C or 350°F.

    Pat the 2" pork cubes as dry as possible with paper towels.

    Put about 1/4 cup flour in a plastic grocery-size bag.  Add 1/2 tsp salt.  Melt the lard over high heat in a large heavy oven-proof casserole.  While the lard is melting, shake about 1/4 of the cubed pork in the salted flour.  When the oil or lard begins to smoke, add the floured pork cubes, being careful not to dump the flour into the pan.  Cover the pan.  As the pork cubes brown, shake another 1/4 of the pork cubes in flour and salt.  Turn the pork cubes until all sides are golden brown.  Remove browned cubes to a bowl and reserve.  Add more floured pork to the hot lard.  You may need more oil or lard as well as more salted flour.  Repeat until all pork cubes are well browned.  Reserve the browned pork in the same pan, scraping the crispy bits from the bottom.

    Most Mexican housewives do not flour and brown the pork cubes prior to cooking them in the sauce.  I like to prepare the dish this way because the browned flour adds a deeper flavor to the finished sauce.  Everyone taste is different, though, and you are of course welcome to tweak the recipe till the finished product is just the way you like it.

    Add the sauce to the pork cubes in the casserole, making sure that all the cubes are immersed in sauce.  Cover and put the casserole into the oven, reducing the heat to 160°C or 325°F.  Bake for two hours.  Add cooking liquid from the vegetables if necessary to keep the sauce relatively thick but not sticking to the casserole.  The pork will be fork-tender and the green sauce will take on a rich, deep, pork-y flavor and color.

    Carne y Salsa Listo para Hornear
    The browned pork cubes and green sauce, ready to be baked.  This particular batch of carne de cerdo en salsa verde was a little more than double the recipe included here.  The recipe is very forgiving and can easily be doubled or tripled to fit the number of guests on your dinner party list.  If a whole recipe is too much for your needs, make it anyway: it freezes very well.

    Serve with arroz blanco (steamed white rice) or arroz a la mexicana (red rice), refried beans, a colorful, contrasting vegetable, and fresh, hot tortillas.  Mexico Cooks!' money-back guarantee: everyone will come back for seconds.

    Provecho!

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  • Mexico Cooks! Turns Five: Thanks to You, We’re Celebrating Our Fifth Anniversary

    Sonajas Feb 2 2007
    This is the very first photo published by Mexico Cooks! on February 2, 2007: multicolor sonajas (rattles) for sale at a Michoacán artisans' fair.  Wouldn't you love to work a jigsaw puzzle made from this picture?

    The first week of February 2012, Mexico Cooks! joyfully celebrated its fifth birthday.  In March, 2007, only weeks after our first publication, one of our articles was titled, 'From That Little Beginning', quoting the owner of the original producer of Salsa Cholula in speaking of his own business.  Today, we echo his thoughts: who would have thought that after Mexico Cooks!' initial article on Candlemas Day 2007–that 'little beginning' article read out of the goodness of their hearts by an audience of 2 or 3 friends–that our current readership would number nearly one million faithful followers?  Who would have thought that the London Times would name Mexico Cooks! the number one food blog in the world?  And who would have thought that at ten o'clock every Saturday morning for five years, a new Mexico Cooks! article would be ready for you to read?  Trust me, not us!

    Indian Market...Plums
    In February and March 2008, Mexico Cooks! published several articles about our travels to the southern Mexican state of Chiapas.  Many of our readers asked if this photo, taken at the San Cristóbal de las Casas indigenous market, were for sale or if it would be part of a calendar. 

    Olla con asa, James Metcalf
    September 2009 featured Ana Pellicer and James Metcalf, internationally-known copper artists from Santa Clara del Cobre, Michoacán.  This large and utilitarian French-style tinned copper pot with hand-forged iron handle, although not representative of the artists' fine sculptural works, is part of a popular baterie de cuisine–a set of kitchen pots designed and sold by the couple.  Mexico Cooks! featured Ana Pellicer again in November 2010 when she received the illustrious Michoacán Premio Estatal de las Artes Eréndira (Eréndira State Arts Prize of Michoacán).  She is the first woman ever to receive the award.

    Tortita de Calabacita
    Tortita de calabacita (little squash fritter) from the sorely missed Restaurante Los Comensales in Morelia, Michoacán.  Mexico Cooks! featured the restaurant (the name means 'The Diners') in October 2009.  Less than a year from the date of our interview with her, Señora Catalina Aguirre Camacho, the owner of Los Comensales since 1980, became too elderly and incapacitated to continue to operate her wonderful restaurant.

    And of course there was always food at Mexico Cooks!: recipes, history, and mouth-watering photographs have filled our pages since the beginning.  If these few memorable articles leave you hungry for more, our archives contain nearly 300 articles, each with six–or eight–or ten–or more photos. In January 2009, we featured the first retrospective of the prior year's highlights of some of your favorite articles about Mexican food. 

    Ilama 3 Cristina
    Over the last five years, we have frequently featured Mexican ingredients and how to use them in your home kitchen.  Some of the most popular articles showcased fresh and dried chiles, and some of Mexico's exotic fruits.  This fruit, the wild ilama (Annona diversifolia) from Michoacán's Tierra Caliente (hot lands), is all but unknown outside its home territory.  Its skin color is ashy green with tinges of pink on the outside.  The flesh is rosy pink; the flavor is a little like a cross between a peach and a pineapple.

    Seasoning Ingredients Caldo
    If you had to guess, which of Mexico Cooks!' nearly 300 articles do you think would be the most searched for on Google?  Think of the ultimate comfort food.  Yes: it's caldo de pollo, Mexican-style chicken soup.  The article is so popular that once a year, we publish it again!

    Frijoles y Chiles Sartén
    Another enormously popular article features the preparation of Mexico Cooks!-style frijolitos refritos (refried beans).  Prepare them this way once and you may never eat them any other way.

    Globos de Noche
    It's almost always a party here at Mexico Cooks!, and you are always invited.  Join us at ten o'clock every Saturday morning.  Look at the right-hand side of the page to click on "Subscribe to this blog's feed' and receive each new week's Mexico Cooks! article and photos via email.

    And what might be Mexico Cooks!' favorite part of this five-year-long party?  It's not the food, nor the travels, nor the fascinating cultural insights to this marvelous country that I can share with you, the country for which I fell hook, line, and sinker in 1981.  Nope.  The best part of all is you

    Bloggers Los Panchos Los Bloggers
    Mexico Cooks! met a number of fellow food writers in Mexico City in 2010.  What did we do?  Oh please!  We met for lunch, of course.

    Many of you have written to me to talk about your joy at discovering Mexico's traditions, including its traditional foods.  Many of you have written to me for advice about travel, restaurants, and the use of various Mexican ingredients.  Many of you have written to me, like this person, to share a memory: "Thanks. I cried and remember my family.  They always ate corundas with pork and chile.  It has been many, many years since I visited my family's town in Mexico.  Your articles always take me home to my beloved Mexico."  Be assured that knowing that you are there–wherever you are in the world–you are the reason that Mexico Cooks! continues.  Thank you for five years of support, trust, and confidence.

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  • Azul Histórico: Chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita in Mexico City’s Downtown!

    Azul Histórico 1
    Stroll into the magical patio that is Azul Histórico.  As you come through the welcoming entrance, the bar and its seating area are on your left, just behind the big blue letters that spell out the restaurant's name.

     A little less than a year ago, Mexico City's culinary aficionados began to throng to chef Ricardo Muñoz Zurita's Azul/Condesa, which opened near the end of January 2011.  His other two restaurants (both called Azul y Oro) at the UNAM (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), were and continue to be a gastronomic Mecca in the far southern reaches of the Distrito Federal.  Difficult to access by either public or private transportation, those of us who dined there felt that we had conquered both time and space to arrive.  The opening of Azul/Condesa gave defeños (residents of the Distrito Federal) and tourists alike an easy option for enjoying the same exquisite dishes served at Azul y Oro–with Azul/Condesa's welcome addition of the opportunity for cocktails or a bottle of wine with a meal.

    Azul Histórico 9 Casa de los Condes de Miravalle
    The former Palacio de los Condes de Miravalle, at Isabel la Católica #30 in Mexico City's Centro Histórico (historic downtown), has been a great gray presence on this street since 1697.  Just left of the center of the photograph you see the tall wooden doors that open into Azul Histórico.  Photo courtesy Skyscraper City.

    Mexico Cooks! was really torn about whether to eat at Azul Histórico right after its January 25 opening or wait until any opening kinks were worked out.  Culinary curiosity (not to mention appetite) won out, and we made a reservation for mid-afternoon comida (main meal of the day) on January 28.

    Azul Histórico 2
    Restaurante Azul Histórico, which quite comfortably seats 100, fills the central patio of the 17th century palace of the counts of Miravalle.  Surrounded by first-floor balconies, the open-air restaurant is crowned by towering 100-year-old laurel trees.  I asked manager Gonzalo Serrano Orozco how patrons would be protected during the Mexico City summer rainy season.  He gestured at the sky.  "We have an enormous cover to spread over the entire patio." 

    Azul Histórico 3 Table Setting
    Table setting at Azul Histórico.  The tables, specially made for the restaurant, are hand-branded with the names of streets in the Centro Histórico.  The small blue enamelware pots of greenery give a touch of living nature to your table.  The jícaras (dried and carved half-gourds) are for drinking mezcal.

    Azul HIstórico opens early in the morning (eight o'clock) for business breakfasts, hungry tourists who have lodgings downtown, and anyone else who wants something marvelous to eat to start the day.  Classic huevos motuleños (two fried eggs on tortillas, with black beans, ham, and peas, all bathed in a salsa picosa–spicy red sauce), anyone?  Or perhaps you'd rather try chilaquiles rojos con arrachera–fried tortilla pieces cooked until just tender with delicious and grilled-just-right steak slices.

    Azul Histórico 10 Gonzalo Serrano y María José Serrano
    Gonzalo Serrano Orozco is the house manager at both Azul/Condesa and Azul Histórico.  He's hugging the super-talented young chef María José Serrano Sada, in charge of the kitchen at Azul Histórico.

    The menu at Azul Histórico is identical to the menu at Azul/Condesa.  The two restaurants also offer full bar service, including house-special flavored margaritas and an excellent variety of regional mezcales and tequilas.  But liquor is one thing, and the fabulous food offerings are another.  Mexico Cooks! and wife started with a jícara of mezcal (me) and a shot of tequila (her), but we quickly graduated to the order of the day: what to eat.

    Azul Histórico 4 Mezcal Bread Oranges Salsa
    On the table before the food: a tiny enamelware pot of live greenery, a basket of hot breads, a pot of salsa for the bread, my jícara of mezcal on its woven base, and a plate of traditional orange slices dusted with sal de gusano to accompany the drink.

    Azul Histórico 5 Crema de Cilantro
    Judy started her meal with a beautiful deep-green cream of cilantro soup, topped with a little hill of sliced almonds and a big swirl of crema de mesa–Mexican table cream.  She needed a pinch of additional salt for the soup, but pronounced it delicious, with the just-right taste of cilantro.  Her tequila and house-made sangrita chaser are visible at top left.

    Azul Histórico 6 Ensalada de Pera y Roquefort
    I ordered the ensalada de pera con queso Roquefort: the large salad includes crisp, fresh mixed greens, sliced Bosc and red Bartlett pears, large crumbles of delicious Roquefort cheese, and a scattering of roasted cashews.  The dressing is oil and balsamic vinegar, with a touch of sweetness–just right for the salad.  The dressing, over and above the decorative drizzle on the plate, is served in that little blue jug at the right of the photo.  It's my favorite salad on the restaurant menu.

    Azul Histórico 7 Filet con Chichilo
    Judy ordered the filete de res con chichilo (filet mignon with a dark Oaxaca mole made with the ashes of chile seeds and ground, dried avocado leaves).  In this presentation, it's served over sliced, steamed chayote and accompanied by pickled red onions and chochoyones (little Oaxacan dumplings made of corn dough).  The beef needed better searing so it would cook to the required done-ness.  After our meal, we talked with chef María José Serrano about the difficulties of teaching her sous chefs the technique of searing and oven-finishing beef; neither of those techniques is widely practiced in central Mexico, but she knows and is eager to give the correct instructions.

    Azul Histórico 8 Pechuga en Mole Negro
    I ordered pechuga de pollo con mole negro (boneless chicken breast with Oaxacan black mole).  The chicken breast was perfectly cooked: tender and juicy.  It's unusual to be served a chicken breast cooked exactly right and this one was extraordinarily wonderful.   Mole negro is my always my first choice among moles: it's not too sweet, with deeply complex flavors, and with the precise amount of spiciness to please my palate.  Ricardo Muñoz's recipe is out of this world.  The dish of chicken and mole comes topped with a single slice of fried sweet plátano macho (super-ripe plantain) and a sprig of cilantro.  Perfect.

    Service at the new restaurant was almost entirely glitch-free, even on only its third day serving customers.  We needed to request napkins (they were deliberately kept off the table due to latent construction dust in the building) and salt, but every other wait staff detail was topnotch. 

    And the initial evaluation for Azul Histórico from Mexico Cooks!?  Here's my checklist on a scale of one to ten, ten being best:

    • Style and decor: 10
    • Creative and appropriate use of historical space: 10
    • Innovation in creative details: 10
    • Prompt and appropriate attention from wait staff and other personnel: 10
    • Food: 9 with a bullet
    • Ease of access: 10 for public transportation access, 10 for tourist access, 10 for handicapped access

    So should you wait a while to dine at Azul Histórico or should you get on over there now?  My advice: make a reservation, go now AND later, and take me with you!  You are going to love it.

    Azul Histórico
    Isabel la Católica #30
    Between Calles Francisco Madero and 16 de septiembre
    Centro Histórico
    Across the street from the Casino Español
    Two blocks from the Zócalo
    Metro Isabel la Católica or Metro Allende
    Hours: 8AM (for breakfast) until 11PM
    Tels. 5510.1316 or 5521.3295
    Azul Histórico

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  • Qué Rico! Caldo de Pollo: Chicken Soup, Mexican Style

    First published about two years ago, this is by far the most popular of Mexico Cooks!' nearly 300 archived articles.  There's just something wonderful about comfort food, no matter what culture prepares it!

    Seasoning Ingredients Caldo
    Seasoning ingredients for preparing the caldo (broth) for Mexican caldo de pollo (chicken soup).  Clockwise from top right in the photo: unpeeled carrots, white onions, chiles serranos, garlic, fresh bay leaves, cilantro, and thyme.  I also added a big sprig of fresh hierbabuena (mint)and a small sprig of fresh epazote (wormweed).  If you can't find fresh epazote, leave it out.  The dried variety adds no flavor to any of your recipes.

    There are few meals more undeniably Mexican than delicious, home-made caldo de pollo (Mexico's marvelous take on chicken soup with fresh vegetables).  During the winter, when the temperature is chilly, what better to warm us from the inside out than Mexico's traditional, rich, delicious caldo de pollo (chicken soup)?  You who live in even colder countries will love it as much as we do.  Nothing could be simpler to prepare.  The ingredients are easy to obtain, the broth all but cooks itself, and the final preparations are a snap.

    Pollo Listo para Caldo
    This beautiful chicken weighed approximately 5.5 pounds before cooking.

    Mexico's chickens are perfectly suited to caldo de pollo.  Yellow skin and pink flesh create a fragrantly savory stock.  If you've traveled to Mexico and visited our markets, you may have wondered why our recently sacrificed raw chickens look so…so chicken-y, so golden and inviting.  They're fed ground marigold petals along with their feed!  The bright golden color of the flowers is transmitted not only to their skin and flesh, but also to the yolks of their eggs, which sit up high and bright in your breakfast skillet.  Several years ago, a shall-remain-nameless neighboring country to the north imported some of its frozen chicken to our supermarkets: gray, lifeless whole chickens and lumps of breast and leg meat lay in freezer compartments waiting to be purchased.  Mexican housewives looked at these icy products and recoiled.  Little of it sold and I currently notice that no imported frozen chicken is available either at my neighborhood tianguis or in the supermarkets I visit from time to time.

    Mexico Cooks!
    prefers to remove as much fat as possible from the chicken before cooking, leaving only a little to give body and flavor to the broth.  The skin stays on, both for color and flavor.

    Pollo en la Olla
    In the pot: the chicken back and legs, along with the seasoning ingredients and water, ready to cook.

    Caldo de Pollo (Mexican Chicken Soup)

    For the broth
    1 whole chicken, approximately 5-6 pounds
    1 1/2 white onions, peeled
    2 large cloves garlic, peeled
    2 large carrots, peeled and cut in half
    2 chiles serranos, sliced from tip to stem end
    2 bay leaves
    6 stems cilantro
    Large sprig fresh hierbabuena (mint)
    Small sprig fresh epazote (wormweed), optional.  If you can't get it fresh, leave it out.
    Large pinch of thyme
    Sea salt to taste
    Water
    Stock pot

    Procedure
    Remove as much fat as possible from the raw chicken.  Remove the bag of menudencias (heart, gizzard, liver, etc).  Mexico Cooks! prefers to separate the entire breast and wings from the back and legs, using the back and legs for preparing the broth and reserving the breast and wings for later use.

    Put the skin-on chicken back and legs and all seasoning ingredients except the salt into the stock pot.  Add approximately 12-14 cups cold water.  Bring to a boil, lower to simmer.  Skim the broth once.  Simmer, partially covered, for approximately 1.5 hours.  Cool slightly and add sea salt to taste.  Remove all vegetables, herbs, and the chicken back and legs from the pot.  Chill the broth overnight and peel off any congealed fat.

    Because my wife and I prefer to eat breast meat, I often shred the cooked leg and back meat to be used in other recipes.  However, when I made this batch of caldo de pollo, I took large chunks of the dark meat and added them to the broth.

    Ingredients for Eating
    Ingredients for the final preparation of the caldo de pollo, to cook in the broth just before serving.  Clockwise from top right: calabacitas (tender zucchini, about 3" long), peeled carrots, chicken breast, fresh green beans.  Potatoes, ready to be peeled, are in the foreground.

    To finish the caldo de pollo:

    Ingredients
    1/2 pound fresh green beans, broken in thirds
    4 carrots, peeled and cut into 2" lengths
    4 to 6 calabacitas (tiny zucchini will do), cut into 2" lengths
    2 or 3 large potatoes, cut in eighths
    2 half chicken breasts, cut into three pieces each
    2 chicken wings, pointed end sections removed

    About an hour before mealtime, bring the broth to a simmer.  Add all of the above ingredients to the broth.  Simmer for half an hour, or until the chicken and vegetables are done.

    During the half hour that the vegetables and chicken are cooking in the caldo de pollo, prepare a pot of traditional Mexican rice.  In a couple of tablespoons of vegetable oil, sauté the amount of rice you want (I usually use 1 or 2 cups of raw rice) until  the rice is uniformly golden brown.  Add 2 cups of tomato water for every cup of rice, bring to a boil, cover the pot and lower the heat to simmer until the rice is fluffy, about 20 minutes.

    Tomato Water for Rice
    3 raw Roma tomatoes
    1/3 white onion, roughly chopped
    1 small clove garlic, peeled
    2 cups water
    Salt to taste

    Add all ingredients to your blender and whiz until smooth.  Strain through a fine colander and use for cooking rice.

    Tazón de Caldo de Pollo
    The finished product, steaming and delicious any time!

    At meal time, have the following on the table: a large bunch of fresh cilantro in a glass of water; a plate of halved limones or limes, a dish of sea salt; and a cooked (not raw) or bottled table salsa of your choice.  Plenty of hot-from-the-griddle corn tortillas round out your meal.

    Salsa Purhépecha Chile Perón
    Mexico Cooks! favorite bottled salsa: Cosecha Purhépecha Salsa Casera de Chile Perón (Home-style sauce made of chile manzano, known as chile perón in Michoacán).  It's made in Chilchota, Michoacán, and I keep a big stash of it in my Mexico City pantry.

    To serve your caldo de pollo, add a large spoonful or two of steaming hot rice to each diner's bowl.  Next, add chicken and a good amount of vegetables.  Fill each bowl with hot, fragrant broth.  Each person can then add a pinch of sea salt, some cilantro leaves, a squeeze or two of jugo de limón, and salsa to his or her own taste.

    Makes four to six servings with a lot of rich broth left over for other uses.  I strain the broth and then freeze it in gallon ziplock freezer bags.

    Provecho!

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  • Casa Madero at Izote de Patricia Quintana: Wine Tasting and Menú de Degustación

    IZOTE Patricia Quintana, Pedro Poncelis, Brandon Milmo
    Sr. Brandon Milmo, director of Casa Madero Winery (Parras, Coahuila, Mexico), chef Patricia Quintana, and don Pedro Poncelis, Mexico's premier sommelier, at Restaurante Izote de Patricia Quintana.

    Rain!  As Mexico Cooks! was leaving the house, as we finally grabbed a cab, while we were traveling (in rush hour traffic, of course) to Mexico City's upscale Colonia Polanco, the unseasonable rain bucketed down.  But like magic, just as we pulled onto slightly nose-in-the-air Av. Presidente Masaryk (Mexico City's equivalent to New York's Fifth Avenue) the rain–and the cab–stopped.  Respectably late, we strolled, blessedly dry and with umbrellas tightly furled, into Patricia Quintana's little piece of heaven: Restaurante Izote.

    IZOTE Diapositiva 1
    Casa Madero sponsored the Casa Grande Shiraz cata vertical (vertical wine tasting).  In a vertical wine tasting, each of the wines served is the same, but from several different years.  In this case, the Casa Grande Shiraz was from 2005, 2006, and 2007.  Grown on the same vines but under slightly different climatic conditions, each year's crop had different fragrances, colors, and flavors.

    IZOTE Judy, Rondi Frankel, Fabiola de la Fuente
    Judith McKnight, left, enjoys the company of Mexico City wine expert Rondi Frankel (center) and Fabiola de la Fuente, editorial director of Food+Travel México magazine.  We all found plenty to talk about before we were seated for the wine tasting and dinner pairings.  A tidbit of information: Casa Madero, founded in 1597, is the oldest winery in the New World.

    IZOTE Mantelito Casa Grande
    At first glance, these Casa Madero placemats appeared to have been already used, stained by circles of vino tinto (red wine).  Several people (including Mexico Cooks!) not-so-surreptitiously touched the wine stains, only to discover that they were cleverly printed on the paper mat.  Below each supposed stain was space for notes about each year's wine.  Jorge Luis Trejo Villaseñor, Casa Madero's national sales manager, called my attention to the outstanding legend at the bottom of the placemat: A qué sabe un vino con 5 siglos de pasión? (What is the flavor of a wine with five centuries of passion?)

    IZOTE Brandon Milmo con Sommelier Claudia Juárez
    Casa Madero's director, Brandon Milmo, listens intently as elegant sommelier (highly trained wine steward) Claudia Juárez discusses the special characteristics of each of the three Shiraz wines.  She wears the sommelier's formal uniform, including the tastevin on its chain.

    The tastevin (saucer-like silver cup) was originally created by French winemakers to enable them to judge the clarity and color of wine that was stored in dim, candle-lit wine cellars. Regular wine glasses were too deep to allow for accurate judging of the wine's color in such faint light. Tastevin are designed with a shiny faceted inner surface. Often, the bottom of the cup is convex in shape. The facets, convex bottom, and the shiny inner surface catch as much available light as possible, reflecting it throughout the wine in the cup, making it possible to see through the wine.

    With the advent of modern electric lights, the tastevin has very little practical use, although sommeliers often wear them on a ribbon or chain around the neck as a nod to tradition and a symbol of pride in their profession.

    IZOTE Tres Copas
    The three Casa Grande Shiraz pours; from left to right, 2005, 2006, and 2007.

    While sommelier Claudia Juárez instructed us, we 50 guests of the house carefully tasted the three wines.  Mexico Cooks! is a relative neophyte in the world of oenology, but the lessons of the evening were well learned.  Really tasting wine isn't about pounding down a tumblerful of the rosé that you've poured from the cheap boxed wine in your refrigerator.  Instead, there are qualities to look for in your glass: how does the wine look, from its color to its 'legs'?  How does it smell–fruity, nutty, leathery, spicy?  How does it taste–floral, peppery, acidic, light, heavy?  Most important of all, of course, is whether or not you like what you're drinking.

    IZOTE Copa con Piernas
    A wine's 'legs' (also called 'tears') are the subtle traces left on the inner bowl of the glass after the wine is gently swirled around several times.  Once thought to be an indicator of quality, experts now say that the legs are in fact a product of surface tension and an indicator of alcohol content.  In the photograph, you have the best view of the legs at the bottom left corner of the flower arrangement.

    After carefully tasting each individual Shiraz and then comparing the various merits of the three years, we began to enjoy the food maridaje (pairings with the wines).  Chef Patricia Quintana, internationally known for Restaurante Izote, for her many cookbooks, her television shows, and her annual Aromas y Sabores tours, prepared a twelve-course tasting menu (yes, twelve courses!) consisting of eight savories and four sweets.

    IZOTE 1 Timbal de Frijol con Morilla
    First course: timbal de frijol con morillas, queso pijijiapan y chile ancho con mezcal.  In this case, the timbale is a cylindrical mold of beans filled with minced morel mushrooms and topped with cheese from Pijijiapan, Chiapas.  You can see the sauce on the side.

    IZOTE 2 Taquito de Cabrito en Salsa Verde
    Next, a taquito de cabrito con salsa verde–a freshly made corn tortilla wrapped around shredded goat meat, then fried and bathed with green sauce, Mexican table cream, and dusted with aged cheese.  A chopstick, inserted into one end of the taquito, made for ease of handling.

    IZOTE 3 Enchilada de Queso Asadero
    Third course: enchiladas de queso asadero en salsa de jitomate con chile verdeQueso asadero is a melting cheese, used in this instance to fill the enchilada.  The tomato and green chile sauce, along with the topping of thinly sliced onion, finely grated aged cheese, and shredded lettuce, were traditional accompaniments raised to a celestial level.

    IZOTE 4 Pescado al Vapor con Tinga Cerrado
    Fourth: pescado al vapor a la tinga con papa (steamed fish, in this case red snapper, in a spicy red sauce–all sitting on a slice of potato and wrapped for steaming in a banana leaf).

    IZOTE 4.5 Pescado al Vapor con Tinga Abierto
    The banana leaf spread open, showing the pescado al vapor a la tinga con papa.  This dish was my hands-down favorite.  The mixture of flavors in the tinga combined with the sweet tenderness of the fish to explode in a sensational fiesta in my mouth.

    IZOTE 5 Ensalada de Jitomatito
    Fifth course: ensalada de jitomatitos con vinagreta al Shiraz Casa Grande 2007.  This salad is made of tiny grape tomatoes dressed with a vinaigrette made with the 2007 wine we were tasting.  The presentation of this salad, as well as that of all the courses, was exquisite.

    IZOTE 6 Camarones con Municiones al Azafrán
    Sixth: camarones con azafrán y municiones (shrimp in saffron sauce with little pasta 'bullets').  Perfectly cooked shrimp-on-a-stick combined beautifully with the richly delicate flavor of saffron, but in my opinion the municiones were a mistake.  The pasta gave the dish a texture that reminded me–and not in a good way–of tapioca pudding.

    IZOTE 7 Enchiladas de Mole Negro
    Seventh: enchiladas de mole negro (black mole enchiladas).  Black mole is one of Mexico's most delicious sauces and this one was no exception.  The combination of mole, sesame seeds, crisp tortilla, and shredded onions–wow!

    All of us guests were of different opinions about which of the three years' Shiraz wines paired better with each of the courses we were eating, but many preferred the 2006 to the earlier or later year.  The 2006 was Mexico Cooks!' favorite.  Waiters circulated with bottles of each Shiraz, replenishing our wine glasses as we emptied them.  At this point in the meal–after most of the courses had been served–many of us began requesting water rather than more wine!

    IZOTE 8 Filete Manuelita estilo Parras
    Eighth: filete Doña Manuelita de Parras.  This seared and crusty filet mignon was cooked exactly to medium rare.  The accompaniments, including the stuffed chayote seen at the top, were excellent.

    IZOTE Brandon Milmo con Patricia Quintana
    Chef Patricia Quintana gently tapped two copas (wine glasses) together to quiet the crowd before she spoke to us about the meal in progress.  The flower in the photo's background images is the izote (the edible flower of the yucca cactus)for which she named her restaurant.

    After the first eight courses, which were of course accompanied by liberal pourings of each of the three wines, most of the invited guests were simply unable to continue to the four-course dessert menu.  Even though each of the savory courses was a small portion, their accumulated richness overpowered all but the most hardy souls.  In addition, we finished the last of the savories at midnight!  Reluctantly we congratulated the chef and kissed her goodbye, shook hands with the remaining guests, and made our way out into the starry late night, the chilly air cleansed by the earlier rain.

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    Disclaimer: Marca País-Imágen de México is a joint public and private sector initiative designed to help promote Mexico as a global business partner and an unrivaled tourist destination.  This program is designed to shine a light on the Mexico that its people experience every day.  Disclosure: I am being compensated for my work in creating content for the Mexico Today program.  All stories, opinions, and passions for all things Mexico that I write on Mexico Cooks! are completely my own.

  • Organic Food and Locavores in Mexico City: Mercado el 100

    Mercado 100 Chilacayote
    Organically grown chilacayote (fig leaf gourd, Cucurbita ficifolia), available at Mercado de 100.  In Mexico, the chilacayote is used above all as a vegetable, but it is also often cooked with piloncillo and other sweetening ingredients and eaten as a candy or as a filling for breads or pastries.

    The locavore movement began in the United States late in the 1960s at a time when people began to awaken to the notion that it would be healthier for themselves and the planet if their food were produced close to home rather than hundreds or thousands of miles from their kitchens.  Today, more people believe that local food systems, often marketing organically-grown products, offer choices that are superior to those proferred by global corporate models.  Within the last few years, the locavore movement has come to Mexico City.

    Mercado 100 David
    This full-size bronze replica of Michelangelo's David gazes from the fountain in the lovely Plaza Rio de Janeiro in Mexico City's Colonia Roma Norte.  The Mercado de 100 sets up in this plaza, at the corner of Calle Durango and Calle Orizaba, every other Sunday morning.

    In years gone by, all the world consisted of locavores.  Produce and meats were not flown or trucked from faraway farms to our supermarkets.  We ate what was seasonal, and most often we ate we we ourselves produced.  In many parts of Mexico, this is still true today.  However, with the country-wide incursion of giant globalized supermarket chains such as Comercial Mexicana, Soriana, Chedraui, Wal-Mart, and others, more and more food is commercially produced and brought to market from enormous distances. 

    Mercado 100 Pan Integral
    Artisanal breads at Mercado de 100, including crossaints and whole grain loaves produced by Mexico City's Pan 100.

    In 2009, a group of friends in Mexico City were the startup group for the non-profit society that directs Mercado de 100.  Concerned about the quality of food available in most supermarkets in the city, they believed (and continue to believe) that the population of this enormous metropolis deserves a choice: the opportunity to eat fresh, pesticide free, locally grown food.

    Mercado 100 Lechugas
    Locally grown organic lettuce.

    Mercado 100 Buxas
    Need an ecological, re-useable market bag?  These come in several sizes and terrific colors.

    When Mercado el 100 started in 2009, it was peripatetic–moving from one location to another every time it set up.  Today, it has a permanent spot at the lovely Plaza Rio de Janeiro, one of the most beautiful small parks in Mexico City.  A visit to the market on a sunny Sunday morning can easily entice you to continue your day with a leisurely stroll around this part of Colonia Roma. 

    Mercado 100 Finca Vai Quesos
    Menu of cheeses from Finca VAI in Querétaro.  Mexico Cooks! tasted the manchego and the reblochon; both are delicious.  One of these days soon we hope to visit Finca VAI for a tour of its operation.

    Mercado 100 Peras etc
    From left to right, organically grown pears, apples, and tomatoes.

    Mercado 100 Aceites y Vinagres
    Locally bottled salsas and vinegars.

    Mercado 100 Huevo de Codorniz
    A bird-ish basket full of quail eggs.  Mexico Cooks! likes to use them blended raw into a licuado (a thick fruit drink similar to a smoothie) or soft-poached, to garnish individual bowls of Chinese watercress and pork soup.

    Mercado 100 Hierbas y Especias
    Herbs and spices, all organically grown (the label attests to that) and pesticide-free.  The booth also offers delicious jams and honey.  Mexico Cooks! brought home a cup of fresh raspberry jam and a bag of gordolobo (Gnaphalium Sp.), a medicinal flower which is brewed into a tea and used as an expectorant.

    Mercado 100 Epazote
    A basketful of fresh organic epazote (wormweed), ready for a long simmer in a pot of beans.

    Mercado 100 Chapulines y Maíz
    Pre-Hispanic era treats in today's Mexico: clockwise from bottom left, dried corn with powdered chile, dried corn with honey and pinole, chapulines (grasshoppers), and pinole.

    Mercado 100 Xamania Jabón
    Artisan-made, locally-produced soaps from Xamania, which also offers earth-friendly body lotions and cosmetics.

    Mercado el 100 logo
    Mercado el 100, open every two weeks in Plaza Rio Janeiro (at the corner of Calle Durango and Orizaba), Colonia Roma Norte, Mexico City.  Tell them their friends at Mexico Cooks! sent you.

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    Disclaimer: Marca País-Imágen de México is a joint public and private sector initiative designed to help promote Mexico as a global business partner and an unrivaled tourist destination.  This program is designed to shine a light on the Mexico that its people experience every day.  Disclosure: I am being compensated for my work in creating content for the Mexico Today program.  All stories, opinions, and passions for all things Mexico that I write on Mexico Cooks! are completely my own.